Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Gifted gives a little more information than gave. If I give you the salt and pepper at dinner, that's not a gift; you shouldn't take it home with you. I don't use it myself, but I see why people would.
Except I never see it used where this information needs clarifying. Even your example is not a context where this information is needed.
I always feel embarrassed for people who use it. It sounds try-hard.
This. Context clues are sufficient for anyone of average intelligence to understand whether something was a gift.
What’s the conclusion when a relative offers to give $100,000 for a house down payment?
That is a gift in the legal sense. The people on here saying "I gifted my SIL a sweater for her birthday" are just trying to sound refined, and failing miserably. You don't have to declare your shitty Ann Taylor sweater to the iRS, Larla!
"Gave" is not a legal term for "gift"
Aunt Peggy gave junior $100,000 as a loan for his downpayment.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Gifted gives a little more information than gave. If I give you the salt and pepper at dinner, that's not a gift; you shouldn't take it home with you. I don't use it myself, but I see why people would.
Except I never see it used where this information needs clarifying. Even your example is not a context where this information is needed.
I always feel embarrassed for people who use it. It sounds try-hard.
This. Context clues are sufficient for anyone of average intelligence to understand whether something was a gift.
What’s the conclusion when a relative offers to give $100,000 for a house down payment?
That is a gift in the legal sense. The people on here saying "I gifted my SIL a sweater for her birthday" are just trying to sound refined, and failing miserably. You don't have to declare your shitty Ann Taylor sweater to the iRS, Larla!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Gifting is part of adulting.
Both words irritate me but I accept that the language is evolving. I won’t use it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Gifted gives a little more information than gave. If I give you the salt and pepper at dinner, that's not a gift; you shouldn't take it home with you. I don't use it myself, but I see why people would.
Except I never see it used where this information needs clarifying. Even your example is not a context where this information is needed.
I always feel embarrassed for people who use it. It sounds try-hard.
This. Context clues are sufficient for anyone of average intelligence to understand whether something was a gift.
What’s the conclusion when a relative offers to give $100,000 for a house down payment?
Anonymous wrote:language evolves, you have to accept that. If you don't you're more likely to suffer dementia in later years
Anonymous wrote:language evolves, you have to accept that. If you don't you're more likely to suffer dementia in later years
Anonymous wrote:Gifting is part of adulting.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Gifted gives a little more information than gave. If I give you the salt and pepper at dinner, that's not a gift; you shouldn't take it home with you. I don't use it myself, but I see why people would.
Except I never see it used where this information needs clarifying. Even your example is not a context where this information is needed.
I always feel embarrassed for people who use it. It sounds try-hard.
This. Context clues are sufficient for anyone of average intelligence to understand whether something was a gift.
Anonymous wrote:I don’t mind the word, and actually think it’s correct usage in your original post. A stranger gifts another person something large. If she gave it to the stranger, it seems weird.